La Revue de médecine interne
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Clinicians are sometimes confronted with the diagnostic difficulties of the idiopathic form of Castleman's Disease (iMCD). As this review reports with demonstrative clinical cases, iMCD can mimic various serious systemic pathologies such as certain autoimmune diseases, Still's disease, POEMS syndrome, and malignant lymphoproliferations, sharing a very similar histology and identical symptoms. To make a diagnosis of iMCD, the clinician must eliminate all the pathologies mentioned above, but he must first think of it and evoke this diagnosis of rare disease before the first symptoms but also know how to evoke this diagnosis again even after several years of evolution of a disease like those mentioned above whose evolution is not favorable. © 2022 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS on behalf of Société nationale française de médecine interne (SNFMI).
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Neutrophilic dermatoses (ND) are a group of inflammatory skin conditions characterized by a neutrophilic infiltrate on histopathology with no evidence of infection. ND are classified based upon the localization of neutrophils within the skin and clinical features. ⋯ ND are diagnoses of exclusion and physicians should always consider differential diagnoses, particularly skin infections. Here, we review the pathophysiology and classification of the main ND (i.e., subcorneal pustular dermatosis (Sneddon-Wilkinson Disease) and Intercellular IgA dermatoses, aseptic pustulosis of the folds, Sweet syndrome, neutrophilic eccrine hidradenitis, pyoderma gangrenosum, erythema elevatum diutinum, neutrophilic urticarial dermatosis and neutrophilic panniculitis), their clinical and histopathological features, and we highlight the investigations that are useful to identify ND-associated diseases and to exclude the differential diagnoses.